Bookmark the site

Return to Homepage


US Shopping
UK Shopping



 










DVD : Very Annie Mary [2001]



Search DVD - select a category

Buy Very Annie Mary [2001] online at Discounted New and Used prices. Delivered to your door with Off-The-Bookshelf.
See Larger Image

Very Annie Mary [2001]

starring: Rachel Griffiths, Jonathan Pryce, Ioan Gruffudd, Matthew Rhys, Kenneth Griffith
directed by: Sara Sugarman

Price: £19.99
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5014138038663
Format: Anamorphic, PAL
Label: Cinema Club
Manufacturer: Cinema Club
Number Of Discs: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Cinema Club
Region Code: 2
Release Date: April 14, 2003
Running Time: 99 minutes
Studio: Cinema Club
Theatrical Release Date: 2000
Sales Rank: 17245




Browse for similar items by category:


Editorial Review:

Amazon.co.uk Review:
Captivating and heart-warming, when it was released in 2001 Very Annie-Mary was greeted as the latest in a long line of small, quirky British comedies. In fact, Very Annie-Mary is a proudly Welsh film, celebrating the eccentricity of a small town in the valleys where the inhabitants certainly suffer deprivation but are by no means isolated from the outside world. They simply plough their own furrow. None more so than Annie-Mary herself, a 30-year-old woman trapped in gawky adolescence by the death of her mother and subsequent years of repression by her father, the Pavarotti-obsessed town baker (brilliant Jonathan Pryce). In a plot slightly reminiscent of Little Voice, she has lost her prize-winning singing voice, apparently forever.

Played with resolute intensity by Rachel Griffiths, Annie-Mary is hardly odder than her fellow townsfolk. But when her father has a stroke and she is thrown on her own awkward resources to fulfil both her personal dreams and those of her mortally sick friend Bethan, she finds unique comic ways to cope with disaster. Redemption comes with the return of her ability to sing.

The excellent cast includes cameos from Ioan Gruffudd and Matthew Rhys as the gay couple who run the sweet shop and Ruth Madoc as a libidinous widow. Everyone delivers all-stops-out performances in even the smallest roles. The promising script is loaded with one-liners; but its constituent parts promise more than they eventually deliver. --Piers Ford



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - If you don't have a sense of humour - don't watch.
Very Annie Mary is funny, touching, and is scary in places only because there are characters in the film that are so true to life it's uncanny. If you have ever had any connections with the South Wales Valleys, take a look at this and be entertained. The cast names read like a welsh 'Who's Who' and have been listed in previous reviews, but look out for Joanna Page (Gavin & Stacey) as Lil Bethan Bevan and Ruth Jones (G&S) who has a bit part of a woman buying bread! I bought sweets as a child in the same shop used by Hob & Nob, and the choir in the film sang at my wedding. A truly precious film.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - What a gem!!
This is definitely one of my favourite films of all time. It surely ranks up there with the very best British films like Four Weddings, The Full Monty, Saving Grace and Billy Elliot. I have lent my rather battered copy of the video to several friends, all of whom were delighted with it. I'd recommend it to anyone with a sense of humour who wants to see a funny film with real heart. I love the constant fund-raising efforts by local groups which just go on in the background (like a Giles' cartoon), and the frequent references to 'poor little Bethan Bevan'! The funniest moment for me, though, is where she leaves her father carelessly plonked on the edge of the bed after he's had his stroke, and he just slides off onto the floor! Wonderful! ... Read More:



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - If you know the Welsh valleys, you'll love this film.
This film is hilarious, sensitive and exquisitely acted.
It is not weird, it's barely even quirky as long as you understand and can identify it within it's own context; The Welsh Valleys.
I myself have lived here for many years bringing up my family in a village not that dissimilar to Ogw, and therin lies the secret of this film; it's unerring accuracy. To anyone who knows Wales and knows the valleys the characters in this story are so endearingly relaistic that one finds oneself recognising people and identifying with one incident after another.
Yes Sara Sugarman is playing upon stereotypes here, but that is because they are stereotypes for a reason: because they're true! Rachel Griffiths puts in an outstanding performance ... Read More:



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Weird, but endearing
Very Annie Mary is definitely one of the weirdest films I've seen and has some of the weirdest characters, including Annie Mary in the major role, but at the same time it certainly has its appeal and leaves a strong impression. Makes you laugh, makes you cry, makes you wonder. The story sounds simple when reading the summary, but you have to watch the story to see what can lie behind "simple" things. Like Annie Mary seems simple, simply simple-minded with not much to say or to think or to feel - but it's only the surface. You can see that Annie Mary has her own dreams, feelings, desires and is willing to fight for them, even if she does not / cannot do it like "normal" people do.
Rachel Griffith was great in this role, evoking all kinds ... Read More:



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - The valleys are not this green!
This a a quirky film which promises much but delivers disappointingly little. Not enough is seen of a fabulous location in the South Wales valleys and this is ultimately a pretty patronising and stereotypical view of life there. They may be the 'valleys' but even so I don't think they are 20 or 30 years behind the times as suggested here. The film cannot seem to decide what it is all about. It is not funny enough to be comedy, not strong or interesting enough to be drama, not artistically adventurous enough to be fringe. A promising story is also spoiled by bad casting. The main character is played by Rachel Griffiths who sounds like a New Zealander and never quite manages a convincing Welsh accent. Perhaps this is why Annie Mary seems so stilted. ... Read More:


 



Off The Bookshelf.co.uk gives you a unique shopping experience, you can find all the DVD products you like within a few minutes online, locate the latest charting CD's, DVD's & Games, read DVD reviews on the bestselling DVD Books and DVD products. All DVD are available to buy Used (at a greater saving) or New (at a great discounted RRP). Add the DVD items you would like to your shopping basket, pay securely online and we send these products to be delivered to your door. We take great pride in being able to offer you the great savings partnering with Amazon, offering you cheaper prices than the high street retailers, we have thousands of discounts on all the the DVD's you can buy off the shelf and hope you find the website easy to use.

Thanks for visiting and browsing Off The Bookshelf.co.uk


 

In association with Amazon.co.uk
SME-WS
HolidayHavens - Holiday Rental Accommodation